pidginization exemplified in haitian-creole and tok-pisin
TRANSCRIPT
Pidginization 1
Running head: PIDGINIZATION
Pidginization Exemplified in Haitian-Creole and Tok-Pisin
Jennifer C. Schuit
A Senior Thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for graduation
in the Honors Program Liberty University
Spring 2008
Pidginization 2
Acceptance of Senior Honors Thesis
This Senior Honors Thesis is accepted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for graduation from the
Honors Program of Liberty University.
______________________________ Dr. McClelland, Ph.D.
Chairman of Thesis
______________________________ Dr. Harris, Ph.D.
Committee Member
______________________________ Mrs. J.J. Cole, M.S.W., A.C.S.W.
Committee Member
______________________________ Brenda Ayres, Ph.D.
Honors Assistant Director
______________________________ Date
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Abstract
The purpose of this thesis is to investigate the sociolinguistic process of pidginization and
to show how Haitian Creole of Haiti and Tok-Pisin of Papua New Guinea are living
examples of this process. This will be accomplished in three ways: by giving a synopsis
of both countries’ histories and thus showing how the nature of contact between the
European and indigenous people both initiates and shapes the process of language
creation and transformation; by examining the theoretical life-cycle of pidginization and
some elements of simplification still evident in Haitian Creole and Tok-Pisin today; and
by discussing the current status and usage of each language in its respective country, with
emphasis on its use in the realm of education.
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Pidginization Exemplified in Haitian-Creole and Tok-Pisin
Introduction: Background
Language is always changing. Linguists coming from a biblical worldview owe
this continuously-transitional nature of language to the very origin of our world’s many
tongues, the Tower of Babel. The more a language comes in contact with other tongues
and people-groups, the more it will change and the more dialects and variations it will
produce. This, too, results from the confusion of languages at the Tower of Babel. Some
more concrete reasons for a pattern of continual language transformation include such
things as the conquest and subjugation of people groups, the size of populations of
speakers, language influence, and language isolation, among others. Conquerors will
impose their language upon those subject to their dominance; the sheer numbers of larger
language groups will allow the language to thrive and spread, thus influencing
surrounding language groups; an isolated language will receive less foreign language
influence, thus preserving more of its original linguistic elements. One interesting process
that results from these elements of language-change is that of pidginization, or the
process of creating a pidgin language. A pidgin language is a language that results from
two mutually unintelligible language groups needing to communicate in order to
complete a certain task. In most cases the two groups involved do not have time to learn
each others' respective languages, and the result is a new language formed from a mixture
of the two native tongues. However, a pidgin does not always remain a pidgin; in fact,
due to the constant flux of language, its very nature as a language prevents it from
remaining in its original form. As a result, there exists what is known as the “life-cycle”
of a pidgin language, which includes the stages of pidginization, creolization or
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depidginization, and decreolization (Valdman, 1977, p. 127). Two languages that exist
within the life-cycle and now find themselves in a more-stabilized form are Tok-Pisin of
Papua New Guinea (PNG), and Haitian-Creole of Haiti. In fact Tok-Pisin and Haitian-
Creole are prime examples of the process of pidginization as demonstrated by the history
and the nature of contact between the respective people groups, the exemplification of the
life-cycle and simplification throughout their development as languages, and the current
status and usage of the languages in their respective countries today, particularly in the
realm of education.
Nature of Contact
Of first importance in investigating Tok-Pisin and Haitian-Creole as examples of
pidginization is an understanding of pidginization as a linguistic process resulting from
contact between two language groups and the nature of that contact. One major
characteristic of a pidgin that is undergoing the actual pidginization, or simplification,
phase is that it has no native speakers; in other words, it is not exclusively spoken by
anyone as their only common language. The authors of Pidgin and Creole Linguistics
discuss the concept of “reduced language” as opposed to “full” or “natural language,
placing pidgin languages in the category of reduced language because they do “not serve
as the normal mother tongue of a speech community” (Valdman, p. 100). Loreto Todd
notes that Tok-Pisin is now the most-used language in the country (p. 65); it is “spoken as
a first language by 121,000 and as a second language by 4 million speakers” (Papuan
Languages of New Guinea, 2006). This is because it has completed the pidginization
phase and has entered the creolization, or stabilization, phase of the life-cycle; these life-
cycle phases will be discussed later. Many of the people who speak Tok-Pisin as a first
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language are monolingual (SIL International, 2005). The same can be said of Haitian-
Creole, which boasts over seven million speakers found throughout nine different
countries (Gordon, 2005). As Valdman states in his book Pidgin and Creole Linguistics,
“[i]t is the native language of nearly all Haitians, though standard French is also spoken
by some people and is the official language, and one also hears many varieties
intermediate between the standard and the creole” (p. 5).
Pidginization is really a process of language-simplification. In order to make the
communication process between two mutually unintelligible languages as efficient and as
fast as possible, most irregularities of the languages are removed. Any simplification will
necessarily allow the speaker to be better understood by the listeners. This simplification
process usually includes the removal of inflection, reduction of prepositions used,
overgeneralization of rules, and making tense distinctions by markers such as “now,” and
“after,” rather than modifications of the verb itself (Todd, 1984, p. 13). Comrie notes that
“[w]hat arises in such a situation is, initially, an unstable pidgin, or jargon, with highly
variable structure—considerably simplified relative to the native languages of the people
involved in its creation—and just enough vocabulary to permit practical tasks to be
carried out reasonably successfully” (1990, p. 26).
A pidgin can be thought of as a combination of simplified register, or less-formal
language, and broken language, which is characteristic of the under-developed utterances
spoken by a second language learner. In Pidgin and Creole Linguistics, Valdman
summarizes this concept saying that “[s]implified registers are reductions of a source
language; broken language is a reduction of a target language; and a pidgin is both…”
(1977, p. 100). A pidgin is a combination of the two because it combines the use of two
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languages at a lower register, so as to be understood by the respective listeners, and the
broken language used by someone learning a second language. Pidginization is thus a
unique manifestation of second language acquisition. An in-depth discussion of the stages
of language simplification and re-establishment within the life-cycle will be discussed
within the context of the two languages under consideration.
A particularly defining step in the process of pidginization is the very
commencement of the pidgin; this point in time is defined by the nature of contact
between the respective people groups as seen in the context of history. Recent studies in
the field of pidginization show the importance of not over-generalizing the process of
pidginization; the timeline of the process is completely subject to the individual context
of each language. This is why pidginization is a socio-linguistic phenomenon. Jourdan
notes in his article “Pidgins and Creoles: the Blurring of Categories” that “pidgins and
creoles emerged in very diverse social conditions, and did not necessarily follow the
same developmental path” (1991, p. 189).
Although many pidgins and creoles were born as a result of European colonial
and imperialistic endeavors (p. 191), many pidgins and creoles can be found around the
globe as a result of indigenous social interaction. However, “most modern pidgins are
the result of colonial expansion and thus they have evolved from a master-servant type of
contact between speakers of European tongues and speakers of so-called “exotic”
languages” (Todd, p. 12). Pidgin languages may serve both inter-group and intra-group
communication; it is also possible for these to occur simultaneously. As in the example of
Papua New Guinea, Tok-Pisin was initiated to serve communication purposes between
colonizers and indigenous people. However, it is probable that the indigenous peoples
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found the pidgin language to be useful for communication amongst their own varying
language groups and for this reason took advantage of the newly created tongue (p. 14).
History
Papua New Guinea
This general investigation of the nature of pidgin and creole languages and how
they are formed leads to a better understanding of the particular pidginization process that
shaped Tok Pisin and Haitian-Creole, beginning with an investigation of the history of
colonization of Papua New Guinea (PNG). Today, the independent state of Papua New
Guinea is located in the southwestern Pacific Ocean, just north of Australia. This country
takes up the eastern half of the island of New Guinea, while the western half contains
Indonesian Irian Jaya. PNG was the object of several colonial exploits prior to its official
independence on September 16, 1975: “[t]he Dutch visited the island in 1606, the English
in 1670 and the French in 1768, but none of these people attempted a permanent
settlement” (p. 64). The British finally attempted the first permanent settlement in 1793.
Then in 1828 the Dutch succeeded in claiming the entire western half of the island,
present-day Irian Jaya, making it part of the Dutch East Indies. The eastern half of the
island which is now Papua New Guinea was surveyed by John Moresby of Great Britain
in the 1870s, and by 1884 the southeastern part of New Guinea had been established as a
British protectorate. Australia took over administration of this portion of the island in
1906; this land became known as “Papua.” The northeastern portion of New Guinea was
accounted for in 1884 by the claims of the German New Guinea Company although it too
was later taken over by Australia as a mandate of the League of Nations in 1921,
following World War I. In 1945 southeastern Papua was combined with northeastern
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New Guinea under Australian administration (Papua New Guinea: Encyclopedia
Britannica). These two sections of the island were appropriately known as “The
Territories of Papua and new Guinea” (Todd, p. 64).
The linguistic implications of the colonial exploits of Papua New Guinea, as with
any pidgin language, are found in the nature of contact between the people groups. In the
case of the indigenous peoples of the island and the colonizers thereof, there existed a
master-servant relationship. During the German administration, “plantations were widely
established in the islands and around Madang; labourers were brought from the Sepik
River, the Markham Valley, and Buka Island” (Papua New Guinea: Encyclopedia
Britannica). Then in the 1930s, nearly 1,000,000 never-before-contacted indigenous
people were discovered in the Highlands of the Australian mandate. According to
Encyclopedia Britannica, “[a]t first, the Highlanders were utilized as a massive source of
labour for the coastal plantations, a role they continue to play” (Papua New Guinea:
Encyclopedia Britannica). The contact between the nationals and the Europeans was thus
primarily an economic one, and one in which the native New Guineans played a
subjugated role. The pidgin language thus developed out of economic need and was
sustained as a lingua franca for multiple reasons. Todd explains that “[a]s soon as a
pidgin developed which was sufficiently flexible to fulfill the needs of a master-servant
relationship, there was little need to replace it with a variety of English closer to the
mother-tongue norm. Indeed, many of the “masters” may have preferred to encourage the
use of pidgin because it helped to emphasize the status quo” (p. 14). Today Papua New
Guinea is extremely multilingual, with more than 850 vernacular languages; thus inter-
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vernacular lingua francas are vital, as recognized by the fact that two of the three national
languages of PNG are pidgin lingua francas (Litteral, 1999).
History
Haiti
Haitian history reveals a similar, if not more brutal account of imperialistic
endeavor and the resulting linguistic implications. Haiti is located on the Caribbean
island of Hispaniola; Haiti occupies the western half of the island, with the Dominican
Republic located on the eastern half. Christopher Columbus was the first European to
discover the island of Hispaniola in 1492. In typical imperialistic European style, the
Spanish quickly took advantage of the existing indigenous population, enslaving them,
primarily to mine for gold. Encyclopedia Britannica states that “European diseases and
brutal working conditions devastated the indigenous population… by the end of the 16th
century, the group had virtually vanished” (Haiti History: Encyclopedia Britannica).
After depleting the gold, the Spanish left the island, which allowed for encroaching
French pirates and settlers to establish themselves permanently on Hispaniola. The
Encyclopedia Britannica explains that “The Treaty of Rijswijk (1697) formally ceded the
western third of the island from Spain to France, which renamed it Saint-Domingue. The
colony’s population and economic output grew rapidly during the 18th century, and it
became France’s most prosperous New World possession, exporting sugar and smaller
amounts of coffee, cacao, indigo, and cotton” (Haiti History: Britannica Online). For this
reason the island was known as the Pearl of the Antilles for an entire century (Key Dates
in Haiti’s History).
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Saint-Domingue developed a system of plantation agriculture which quickly
depleted the island’s resources; however, the European solution was to simply work the
land harder and harder; they accomplished this by overpopulating the island with West
African slaves. The island’s population rose to about 556,000 in 1789; 500,000 of these
were slaves, most of whom were mistreated, overworked, and abused for their labor.
Various factors eventually led to uprising and to slave-revolt. In 1793 through a decree
from French authorities, slaves received an offer of freedom in exchange for serving in
the army (Haiti History: Britannica Online). Toussaint-Louverture, a former slave, took
advantage of Sonthonax’s decree and rose to the position of “governor-general for life,”
much to Napoleon Bonaparte’s chagrin. In 1795 the remaining Spanish portion of the
island was ceded to the French in the Treaty of Basel. After Louverture’s eventual
imprisonment, two men led a black army to defeat the French who were occupying the
island. The French did not recognize Haiti’s independence until 1825, and the United
States did not recognize it until 1862 (Haiti History: Britannica Online).
The linguistic implications of this traumatic history have been significant and
lasting. It may be assumed that due to Hispaniola’s subjugation to various imperial
powers, including the Spanish, British, and French over some, if not all of the island at a
time, has produced a language influenced by all of these same European powers. As seen
by its classification as a French-based creole, Haitian-Creole’s dominant influencing
factor was French (Gordon) combined with the languages of the West-African slaves. As
with Tok-Pisin, Haitian-Creole was born out of a master-servant relationship so as to
provide a means for intra-group communication. It then became a means for inter-group
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communication amongst the slave population, continuing through Haitian independence
into its present-day use as a vernacular.
Overview of the Pidginization Process
After understanding the historical processes and conditions necessary for
initiating the pidginization process, it is then vital to understand the specifics of this
linguistic process before applying it to the contexts of Haitian-Creole and Tok-Pisin. The
process of pidginization is commonly referred to as a life-cycle. The creation of a pidgin
language is a unique situation in which language is born, while simultaneously acting as a
second-language learning process for both language-groups involved. The life-cycle is
generally divided into three phases: pidginization, creolization or depidginization, and
decreolization. After decreolization there may exist a post-creole continuum, which in
essence brings a pidgin increasingly closer to its mother-European tongue or standard
language (Comrie, 1990, p. 27). Upon entering this portion of investigating pidginization,
it is important to realize that while language is constantly changing, language samples
and analyses are snap-shot images. Therefore, most language samples are of the language
in its current form, not of its earlier phases. Although characteristics of the various phases
of the life-cycle can still be seen in the language today, especially when viewed in
comparison with the mother-European tongue, it is helpful to view the language samples
from a current perspective.
The Life-Cycle
Phase I: Pidginization
The preceding discussion of pidginization gave a general introduction to the first
phase of the life-cycle. Two main characteristics of this phase, which often evoke
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comparison with the second language-learning process, are that of simplification and
generalization. Both simplification and generalization involve the influence of the
speaker’s mother tongue (Todd, 1984, p. 13). The speaker might use certain distinctions
or particularities native to his or her mother tongue, while ignoring or overlooking certain
distinctions made by the other language. The following are some examples of the concept
of simplification from Tok-Pisin:
Bai em i gi-im tang long em. FUT. SG.PRO.she V.give N.tongue PREP.to SG.PRO.he. They will become intimate. (Todd 168) This demonstrates that “em” is used to distinguish singular proper nouns. The following
example demonstrates that “em” is also used to designate plural proper nouns, thus
showing that Tok-Pisin eliminates pronominal distinction of both number and gender. If
distinction is necessary, as in the following example, the proper noun or a reference to the
proper noun will be included; this is manifested in the following example as- Dispela
pikinini meri – This child-female (girl).
Dispela pikinini meri em i no gat susu. Det.this N.child N.female PRO. NEG. V. N.breast milk. This girl has not reached puberty. (p. 168)
The following example demonstrates simplification in Tok-Pisin in several ways. The
first sentence within the example demonstrates the non-use of the verb “to be.” Also, this
sentence once again shows the lack of plural inflection. The second sentence shows the
lack of different prepositions; in fact, the same preposition, long, is shown here to mean
both in and near. It also shows a lack of noun determiners which are present in the
English translation.
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Pukpuk i no planti tumas. Ol i stap long tais long Sepik. N.crocodile NEG. many. PL.PRO V. PREP.in N.swamp PREP.near PRO. There are not many crocodiles. They stay in the swamps near Sepik. (p. 175)
Haitian-Creole is similar in that the verb “to be” is generally not expressed, as seen in the
following examples from Wally R. Turnbull’s book Creole Made Easy:
1. (p. 15)
Machin nan gwo. N. ADJ The machine is big. 2. (p. 15) Mwen tré kontan. SG.PRO ADV. ADJ I am very glad. Loreto Todd comments on the simplification aspect of the pidignization phase in her
book Modern Englishes: Pidgins and Creoles, saying that “[l]ike children acquiring
English, pidgin speakers often overgeneralise a rule, but whereas children learn their
English in a society with a ready-made communication system, pidgin speakers have to
invent a language for a community which has just come into being” (p. 13). This idea has
contributed to the “Baby-Talk” theory of pidginization with regard to the simplification
process. This theory suggests that within a master-servant contact situation, as found in
the histories of both Haitian-Creole and Tok-Pisin, the “conquerors” assumed a
condescending attitude toward the indigenous people and assumed they would be unable
to fully learn their European tongue, “and so they spoke as if they were children,
eliminating inflections and grammatical irregularities and limiting the vocabulary to a
few hundred words” (p. 22). This theory results from the distinctly-simplified nature of
pidgins which utilizes elements such as overgeneralization of rules that are used by
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children first learning their mother tongue. However, it does not account for the fact that
although pidgin-speakers are in essence learning a second language, the language is yet
non-existent. Todd states that “[c]hildren progress from their early form of language to a
close approximation of the adult norm because such progress is socially sanctioned. But,
at least in the early stages of contact, pidgin speakers do not have the opportunity to
expand their pidgin by reference to the linguistic norms of the contactors” (p. 23).
Phase II: Creolization/Depidginization
Following pidginization is the second phase of the life-cycle, known as
creolization or depidginization. Although this phase does involve internal linguistic
changes, it also demonstrates two other external characteristics. The first is the
language’s acquisition by native speakers. Valdman explains that “[a]ccording to the
classical life-cycle theory, a creole derives from the nativization of a pidgin, i.e., its
acquisition as a first language by a new generation of speakers” (p. 155). However, this is
a very general and ambiguous definition, and certainly comprises only part of the nature
of the creolization phase.
Another major external aspect of the life-cycle’s second stage deals with the
contexts in which the language is used or has the potential to be used. Valdman continues
his explanation of the life-cycle by saying that “[p]idgins are inadequate languages… in
that they lack explicitly expressed semantic distinctions…” (p. 156). In other words,
although the pidgin in its pidginization phase meets temporary-contextual needs, with
time new contexts inevitably arise and with them a greater population of speakers. A
greater number of speakers will demand greater uniformity in the language so as to
promote comprehension by an increasingly wider-spread population of speakers.
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Valdman continues by saying that “[T]he difference between pidginization and
creolization rests on a shift between context-bound and context-free speech, between
what is linguistically implicit and explicit, between dependence on non-linguistic
semiotic channels and the use of an elaborate grammatical apparatus to transmit
meaning” (p. 157). An example of this concept is the increasing inability to rely on hand
gestures and other “non-linguistic semiotic channels” to communicate meaning; during
the creolization phase the language itself becomes primary in communication, and as a
result it must become more stabilized.
Phase III: Decreolization
In final position within the life-cycle, following pidginization and creolization, is
a phase known as decreolization. The duration of this phase is known as the post-creole
continuum. The existence of this phase in the life-cycle of a language is dependent on one
key factor—the degree of language isolation; in other words—to what extent, if at all,
that the pidgin comes back in contact with one of its mother tongues. For a language to be
de-creolized it must once again be exposed to the mother tongue; in the case of Tok-Pisin
this would be Standard English, and in the case of Haitian-Creole it could be any of the
mother-European tongues, but primarily French. This exposure might come from media
influence, contact with native speakers, incorporation into the world market, or
circumstances in which a mobile population is moved back into its original location
(Todd, 1984, p. 17). Loreto Todd makes a comparison between this phase of
pidginization and the modernization of English from Old English to today’s Standard
English: “[i]f Creole Englishes had been allowed to develop in total isolation from
English, it is certain that some at least would have become distinct though related
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languages, as distinct as SE is from Old English” (p. 16). The term “post-creole
continuum” refers to the fact that in areas where pidgin or creole is spoken there are not
simply two distinct languages: Standard English/French and “standard” Pidgin; rather
there exist speakers at varying levels of standardization between the two (p. 17). These
language levels range from the initial or basilect stage, to the intermediate or mesolect
stage, and up to the acrolect, or "slightly regionally coloured version of the standard
language" (Comrie, 1990, p. 27). This is why Haitian-Creole is often considered a corrupt
version of Standard French. Because Haitian-Creole is in contact with its mother tongue
by means of native French speakers on the island, the creole-continuum is very evident in
Haiti.
As was previously stated, the conditions for a language to enter the decreolization
phase are largely dependent upon the context and the degree of re-introduction to the
mother tongue. However, the question remains regarding what happens to a language that
does not enter the decreolization phase. Hans Henrich Hock notes in his book An
Introduction to Historical and Comparative Linguistics that the life-cycle may end with
the creolization phase and in fact maintain the language at that level (1996, p. 445).
Loreto Todd makes a point that cannot be ignored concerning the unpredictability and
non-uniformity of the pidginization process as a whole:
We have spoken in terms of the processes of pidginisation, creolisation
and decreolisation and we have done this to stress the fact that we are
dealing with dynamic and changing systems of communication and not
with static standards. And yet we have probably given the impression that
there is an inevitable one-two-three-ness about these processes. This is not
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so. Creolisation will not follow pidginisation if the speech community
does not need or want the integration that a lingua franca can provide.
Decreolisation need not occur if the creole remains outside the sphere of
influence of its lexical source language… (Todd, p. 17-18)
Linguistic Analysis: Haitian-Creole
To better understand the two languages under consideration it is necessary to do a
thorough if not comprehensive analysis of some major linguistic components. This
analysis can be divided into three main linguistic categories: syntax, morphology, and
phonology. Various issues or sub-categories will be discussed within each of the larger
divisions. Although glossed texts will be offered as examples of both languages, only a
native speaker of Haitian-Creole was available for this process. The Tok-Pisin texts were
necessarily taken from secondary sources as no native speakers were available. The
following Creole glossed text was transcribed from a voice-recording of a Haitian student
at Liberty University. Note: the first line of the glossed text is the phonological
transcription, not the correct Creole spelling.
Creole Glossed Text moim oili zo-zino-zʌgi. Mʌ tsutsi 1SG.PRO V.call (myself) ProperN. 1SG.PRO V. come from My name is Georges Junior Dugue. I come from atsi. Mo vali kriol. Muɛ vli pali N. 1SG.PRO V.speak N. 1SG.PRO V.want V.speak Haiti. I speak Creole. I want to tell yʌ-tsikras dɣ zunɛ-m du vasi ɛdzia. “a little bit” PREP n.day-1SG.PRO PST.V.spend(time) N.today. a little bit of my time spent today.
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Moi de luvi mati-a aviwon zidʒ-ɛdnyɪ. 1SG.PRO PST V.wake up N.morning-ART. PREP. #10-half I woke up this morning about ten thirty. Moi bɛ Mwe mɪtɪ gat su mwe. 1SG.PRO V.to shower. 1SG.PRO V.put N.clothes PREP 1SG.PRO I took a shower. I got dressed. Hapu sa mu ali na kafitiya-a muɛ buɛn ADV DEM 1SG.PRO V.go PREP N-ART. 1SG.PRO V.take After that I went to the cafeteria to have dizini. ipi a dizɪ-sekant muɛ t-ali na io N.breakfast. then PREP. ten-fifty 1SG.PRO PST-V.go PREP.ART. breakfast. Then at ten-fifty I went to a klas matɛmatsik. Klas la muɛ ti fuiʌmɔ amizi-m N ADJ. N. DEF.ART 1SG.PRO PST ADV V.enjoy-1SG.PRO math class. I really enjoyed myself na klas la. Abu sa mui ti-tuni na ʃam PREP N. DEF.ART. After DEM 1SG.PRO PST-V.go back PREP N. in the class. After that I went back to my room; wen; m-pasi ɛn si to i aʃit-m POSS.my; 1SG.PRO-V.spend ART. ADJ N.time and then-1SG.PRO I spent a little time and then I alɛn mwɛ tunɪ na kafitiya; mwe e dsɪne. V.go 1SG.PRO V.go back PREP N 1SG.PRO FL V.eat lunch. went back to the cafeteria; I ate lunch. Apu-m fɪn bwan zɪni mwe tuni na After-1SG.PRO V.finish V.take N.dinner 1SG.PRO V.go back PREP After I finished having dinner I went back to ol klas mo dɪ-ge ki si-ti un klas ɪnfumatsɪk. ART N 1SG.PRO V. to have V. to be-PST ART N ADJ. have a class which was an information technology class. E zunɪ-m na ti trie bɛl. Muoi di And N.day-1SG.PRO ART PST ADV ADJ. 1SG.PRO PST And my day was very nice. I
Pidginization 20
vioma mɪzi-m e konyʌ-m tiʌm kumtam ADV V.to enjoy-1SG.PRO and now-1SG.PRO ADV ADJ really enjoyed myself and now I am very happy pu-m di-pali n di zune sʌ. PREP-1SG.PRO PST-V.speak PRO PREP N.day DEM. to tell you about this day mɛrsi. Thank you. Syntax
Prior to analyzing the text, a background linguistic sketch by the UCLA website,
“Language Materials Project: Teaching Resources for Less Commonly Taught
Languages” is helpful. It notes that “Haitian Creole preserves much of French
phonological, morphological, syntactical, and lexical characteristics, but a merger of both
French structural features and West African features characterizes the language. The
inflectional system of French is greatly reduced” (UCLA Language Materials Project).
Certain observations can be drawn from the above text concerning key linguistic
elements. Creole syntax is primarily subject-verb-object, as seen in this sentence
extracted from the above text:
Mo vali kriol. 1SG.PRO V.speak N. I speak Creole S V O
Adjectives seem to follow the noun, as seen in the following example:
klas matɛmatsik. N ADJ. math class.
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The following translations were completed by the same Haitian student. I gave
him a series of English sentences to translate directly into Haitian-Creole; from these I
drew several observations concerning aspects of the language.
A. Present tense
- She goes to school. Li ale lekól. -I go to the store. Mwen ale nan boutik la. -You go to a church. Ou ale nan yon legliz. -They go to a restaurant. Yo ale nan yon restoran. -We go to the beach. Nou ale nan plaj la.
B. Past tense -She went to school yesterday. Li te ale lekól.
-When she was young, she went to school. Lé li te jén, li te ale lekól. -You went to a church last week. Ou te ale nan yon legliz semén pase. -When you were young, you went to church. Lé ou te jén, ou te ale legliz
-I went to the store. Mwen te ale nan boutik la. -They went to a restaurant. Yo te ale nan yon restoran. -We went to the beach Nou te ale nan plaj la.
Pidginization 22
C. Word Order -He eats the cake. Li manje gato a. -You kick the ball. Ou choute boul la. D. Plurality -One pencil Yon kreyon
-Five pencils Senk Kreyon -One car Yon vwati -Two cars De vwati -They have many apples. Yo gen anpil póm. E. Possession -The shirt is yours. Chemiz la se pou ou. -Your shirt. Chemiz oua. -The car is hers. Vwati a se pou li. -Her car. Vwati li a. -The house is theirs. Kay la se pou yo. -Their house. Kay yo a.
Pidginization 23
-The bag is ours. Sak la se pou nou. -Our bag. Sak nou an. -The blanket is mine. Dra a se pou mwen. -My blanket. Dra mwen an.
-The dress belongs to her. Wób la se pou li. Morphology
In turning to the morphology of Creole we will first look at verb inflection. First,
verbs are never inflected for gender. The root verb is not inflected for tense; however,
tense inflection is added as a separate morpheme prior to the verb, as identified with bold
in the example below:
Li ale lekól. Li te ale lekól.
She goes to school. She went to school.
With regard to the topic of plurality inflection, we see that plurality is only expressed in
the indication of number preceding the noun; the noun itself is not inflected:
Yon kreyon. Senk kreyon.
One pencil. Five pencils.
Concerning possession, we find that the article is never omitted, unlike English:
Vwati a se pou li. Vwati li a. car the is hers. car her ART . The car (is) hers. Her car.
The following are my observations concerning Creole articles:
Pidginization 24
Follows Object Precedes Object Follows Subject (with Possessives) (the) (a) (the) -la -yon -la -a -a Concerning pronouns, there is no difference between regular pronouns and possessive
pronouns.
Phonology
Finally in turning to the Creole phonology it is important to look at both the
vowel and consonant systems. Haitian-Creole has a ten-phoneme vowel system, which
includes: /i/, /ɛ/, /e/, /e/, /a/, /ã/, /u/, /o/, /ç/, /õ/, /wi/, /w/, /y/ (Haitian Creole: The Sound
System). Creole lacks a few vowels that are present in English, and contains some sounds
such as various nasals that are not found in English, thanks to the French influence. In
turning to the consonant system of the language, there are seventeen consonant
phonemes, which are as follows: /p/, /b/, /f/, /v/, /m/, /t/, /d/, /s/, /z/, /n/, /l/, /r/, /j/, /ch/, /k/,
/g/, /h/. Concerning overall pronunciation, “[t]here is a variation between North and
South, however, and Port-au-Prince pronunciation (especially of vowels) tends to be
more like French, since most of the bilingual Haitian Creole-French speakers live there”
(Haitian Creole: The Sound System).
Linguistic Analysis: Tok-Pisin
The same sort of observations can be made with regard to Tok-Pisin. The
following are some language samples from Loreto Todd’s book Modern Englishes:
Pidgins and Creoles.
Pidginization 25
1. (Todd, p. 174)
Kapul i go long wanpela diwai na em i lukim wanpela kumul. N. V.go PREP SG.ART N. and SG.PRO V.see SG.ART.a N. The tree kangaroo went up a tree and saw a Bird of Paradise. 2. (p. 177)
Tupela i go bek long haus bilong kandere NUM.2 V.go back PREP.to N. PREP.of N. The two went back to their relatives’ house.
3. (p. 178)
Ol man bilong maunten i mekim singsing. PL.PRO N. PREP.of N. V. N. The Highlanders are celebrating.
Syntax
As with the Creole text, certain linguistic observations can be drawn from the Tok-Pisin
text. Tok-Pisin syntax is generally Subject-Verb-Object; however, it lacks certain
syntactical structures that are present in Standard English, such as the passive (p. 199).
The following is an example of the basic SVO syntax of Tok-Pisin. It also demonstrates
that adjectives precede the noun.
4. (p. 175)
Wanpela liklik trausel em i lukim bikpela hos. NUM.1 ADJ N. SG.PRO V. ADJ N. A little tortoise looked (up at a) big horse.
S V O (PP)
Another example is as follows:
Pidginization 26
5. (p. 200)
Yumi kaikai kaukau. PL.PRO V. N. Let’s eat sweet potatoes. S V O
Morphology
Next is the category of morphology. Tok-Pisin verbs are not inflected for gender or for
tense, which once again demonstrates the process of simplification from English, which
does inflect for tense. It’s interesting to note that many Tok-Pisin verbs use the ending
–im; this is often attached to an English root-word as seen in the following (p. 194):
lukim (look-im) mekim (make-im)
Tok-Pisin does make use of one verb-phrase marker, “i.” The marker precedes the verb-
phrase and seems to be a reiteration of the subject, similar to “the recapitulation of “he”
in such sentences as: That big man, he’s a fool.” (p. 194). The use of this marker is seen
in the preceding examples 1, 2, 3, and 4. In place of inflecting verbs for tense, Tok-Pisin
does make use of certain tense indicators preceding the verb, such as bai for future and
bin for past. The similarity can easily be seen between these two indicators and the
English words “by,” also used to indicate the future in phrases such as “by and by,” and
“been,” which is used in the past perfect and past perfect continuous tenses.
6. (p. 203)
Mipela bai go. PL.PRO. FUT V. We will go. 7. (p. 203)
Mipela bin go. PL.PRO PST. V. We went.
Pidginization 27
As with Haitian-Creole, nouns are not inflected for plurality as they would be in English.
Instead plurality is shown with the use of numbers. For example:
8. (p. 164)
wanpela man tripela man nainpela man one man three men nine men
This concept is also demonstrated in the following sentence:
9. (p. 174)
Ol i kisim tupela paul na wanpela sipsip. PL.PRO V. NUM. N. and NUM. N. They caught two chickens and one sheep.
Neither does Tok-Pisin make use of the “s” plural marker as English does. The following
example is taken from the above sentence number five.
kaukau N. sweet potatoes
Possession is also expressed differently than in English. There are no possessive
pronouns; neither is there possessive inflection, such as the apostrophe-s construction in
English. Instead, Tok-Pisin makes use of the preposition “of,” expressed in the word
bilong, derived from the English word “belong,” as seen in the following:
10. (p. 173)
Em haus bilong waitman. SG.PRO.it N. PREP.of N. That’s a European’s house.
A final observation concerns the use of articles: Tok-Pisin does not use articles, neither
definite nor indefinite.
Pidginization 28
Phonology
Concerning the category of phonology, Tok-Pisin has eight vowels, three of
which are diphthongs. This creates a well-balanced phonology system of front, back and
central vowels. They are as follows: /i/, /e/, /a/, /o/, /u/, /ai/, /au/, /oi/. Loreto Todd notes
that “[d]iphthongs are relatively uncommon in TP, except in idiolects which have been
influenced by SE. Frequently, /ai/ is realized as /e/ so that for many speakers wel can
mean “wild” as well as “oil” and some speakers either monophthongise /au/ and /oi/ or
realize them both as /ɔ/. As more and more speakers become literate, however, spelling
will reinforce and possibly extend the use of the three diphthongs” (Todd, p. 162-163).
Tok-Pisin is a syllable-timed language, meaning that each syllable receives the same
length; one syllable will not receive a longer duration except perhaps for emphasis (p.
162). Concerning the consonants, Tok-Pisin has eighteen in all. It is telling of the
decreolization phase that older-generation speakers may use only fourteen consonants,
leaving out /h/, /j/, and /y/; they may also not differentiate between /p/ and /f/. This
increase in phonology differentiation in younger generations is probably largely due to
increased literacy; it also may be evidence of some decreolization, in conforming to the
mother-tongue norms of phonology. A point of differentiation between Tok-Pisin and
English is the fact that they often divide consonant clusters by inserting a vowel, usually
/i/, /a/, or /u/. This is demonstrated in the following words:
s-a-tap— stop, stay
g-i-rin – green
k-u-ru – sprout, shoot (p. 163)
Pidginization 29
Current Status and Usage
Overview
A final component of understanding the process of pidginization as manifested in
Tok-Pisin and Haitian-Creole is investigating these languages with regard to their current
status and usage as modern-day languages. In turning to the status of Tok-Pisin, there are
approximately 4,000,000 second-language speakers per a 2003 SIL report and about
50,000 monolingual speakers. It is one of three official languages of Papua New Guinea,
the other two being English and Motu (SIL International). Despite the existence of these
additional official languages, Tok Pisin is still “the most frequently used language in
Parliament and commerce” and is also used in the public domains of schools, churches,
and government (SIL International). It is important to note that Papua New Guinea is
home to over 850 languages, making it one of the most multi-lingual countries in the
world (Litteral, 1999). This fact is important in understanding Tok-Pisin’s use as a lingua
franca. It’s not hard to imagine the indigenous people’s desire to maintain the language as
a lingua franca after the pidgin’s initial creation for communicating among such a broad
range of speakers
Haitian Creole is one of two official languages in Haiti, Creole and French, and is
spoken by about 5.7 million speakers; it was granted this official status in 1961. Although
90-95 percent of the Haitian population are monolingual speakers of Creole, these
speakers are considered socially inferior to the educated elite who are bilingual in Haitian
Creole and Standard French. The inferior status of Haitian-Creole continues to be a major
restriction in terms of the extent to which it is used in various spheres of Haitian society
today. Creole does have a place as a language of newspapers, radio programs, and
Pidginization 30
television, and has its own dictionary, grammar, and Bible translation which was
published in 1989. However, the perpetually-elite status of French is demonstrated in
French being the primary language of government, business, and education (Haiti:
Creole, Literacy, and Education, 2006).
Education
One important realm of usage related to both Tok Pisin and Haitian Creole as
lingua francas is that of education. It is through education and literacy that a language
will be further stabilized and dispersed. Because of this, the language in which education
is conducted will be a strong determining factor of a pidgin’s life-cycle. If education is
conducted in the European mother tongue, the pidgin is likely to continue into the
decreolization phase because of the ongoing influence of the mother language. If
education is conducted using the pidgin language, the pidgin will likely remain in the
creolized stage. It will also become increasingly standardized as literacy spreads, and will
acquire more and more vocabulary to accommodate the wider range of contexts. Viewing
Tok-Pisin and Haitian Creole and their use in education will offer a more intimate
understanding of the status and use of these two languages in their respective countries of
Papua New Guinea and Haiti, and will help determine their respective positions in the
life-cycle.
Haiti education.
In Haiti, the condescending view of Creole has reverberated strongly within the
educational sphere and has consequently been passed from generation to generation.
Because both the upper and lower classes of society view the Creole language as a mere
vernacular, the upper classes have generally wanted education of the masses to be in
Pidginization 31
Creole, while the poor want it in French. Because French is the language of the elite, the
poor masses view learning the French language as a key to social mobility. While there
was a line of thinking among the elite that education in Creole would make education
more accessible to the masses, “[t]he poor tended to view education more as a means of
escaping poverty than as a means for learning, so many parents were most concerned
about having their children learn French” (Federal Research Division of the Library of
Congress). These were two general mentalities going into the 1970s, which became the
decade of trial-and-error educational reform in Haiti.
Haiti’s education reform began with establishing the orthography of Creole.
Because Creole spelling rules were debated for decades prior to this time, the National
Pedagogic Institute, or Institut Pédagogique Nacional, finally combined the various
elements of two orthographic systems that had been used until that time. Still the new
system was only given “semiofficial” status by the government at this time (Federal
Research Division of the Library of Congress). Yet most students still maintained the
mentality that French was their key to success. A major downfall of the 1970s reform was
that Creole instruction was only mandated for primary schools: “[u]nder pressure from
the public, the government declared that students would begin using French when they
entered the fifth grade. Students entering fifth grade found themselves unprepared for
classroom use of French…” (Federal Research Division of the Library of Congress).
Another major aspect of education is that of adult literacy. Two phases of the
adult literacy movement, the first sponsored by the Roman Catholic Church, and the
second sponsored by the government occurred in the 1960s and 1980s respectively. The
big picture concerning development in this area can be assessed by using 2003 adult
Pidginization 32
illiteracy statistics from a U.N. Common Database. Note that “adult illiteracy” is defined
as “the proportion who cannot, with understanding, both read and write a short simple
statement in everyday life” (Indicator: Adult Illiteracy, 2003). While adult illiteracy rates
have dropped from 69.5 percent in 1980 to 47.1 percent in 2003, in the global picture
Haiti ranks 20th in the world for the highest percentage of adult illiteracy; in comparison
Papua New Guinea ranks 30th. The amount of literature produced and circulated in a
language is a major indicator of that language’s prominence and influence. While Creole
is used in the media, as previously stated, literature as such was still very scarce as Haiti
moved into the 1980s.
Papua New Guinea education.
The scene in Papua New Guinea is much more positive with regard to the use of
Tok-Pisin in education. Since 1955 the educational policy of Papua New Guinea has been
one in which English was the sole mode of instruction used in the classroom (Klaus).
This is certainly not unusual since English is one of the official languages; however, it
was used in schools to the exclusion of the vernaculars and Tok-Pisin, one of three
official languages and the lingua franca. This old system operated under the assumption
that vernaculars, lingua francas and English could not function in a complementary
manner. This trend began to change as a result of evaluation and proposals for reform.
The year 1986 saw the commencement of “the first attempt to develop a concept
of education that was Papua New Guinean in perspective and not a revision of the
colonial philosophy inherited from the Australians” (Litteral, 2001). Their hope was to
intentionally integrate the use of vernaculars, including Tok-Pisin, into the classroom;
their proposed method specifically suggested that the first three years of schooling be
Pidginization 33
completed in the vernacular. Then, in 1989 a national language and education policy was
adopted, recognizing the “provincial, community and NGO efforts of a decade on behalf
of vernacular education” (Litteral, 1999). Some restructuring reform took place in 1991.
The resulting policy is not mandatory, but is adhered to on a voluntary basis; therefore, it
can only “encourage” the following strategies:
1. Vernacular preparatory schools for children before they enter grade one.
2. Vernacular literacy in grade one where there are no vernacular preparatory
schools
3. Grade one bridging classes where there are vernacular preparatory classes in
which vernacular literacy continues and English is introduced
4. The use of the vernacular in non-core subjects in grades one to six
5. Vernacular literacy maintenance through grade 6
6. Vernacular activities in secondary and tertiary education
7. Vernacular literacy and basic education for adults and out-of-school youth
(Litteral, 2001).
The policy’s major goal was to simultaneously promote literacy and
multilingualism. Literacy was to be obtained first in the students’ vernacular, and then
extended to include one of the national languages, Tok-Pisin or Hiri Motu, and finally
English (Litteral, 1999). It is important to note stage three in particular because it shows
how the various languages of PNG can be complementary. This stage also demonstrates
the encouragement of multilingualism in a country of many languages. The policy as a
whole does not entirely ignore the old English-education philosophy, which “focused on
western values and used the education system and English as a means of making Papua
Pidginization 34
New Guinea into a nation that would be politically independent in the modern world”
(Litteral, 2000). But it focuses on improving what the old system lacked, which was
recognition of the validity of vernacular languages as a medium of education. In locations
where Tok-Pisin is the main vernacular, it might be chosen as the language for instruction
in schools.
Another great emphasis of educational reform was to make education relevant to
the students as well as to the community. When students attend a school where they are
learning in their mother tongue, the subject matter becomes more applicable to their
everyday lives. The reform “seeks to make education more culturally relevant to the
student in terms of knowledge, skills and understanding of the world needed to function
in PNG communities today” (Litteral, 2001). This also involves a shifting of emphasis
from western culture and western pedagogy to focus more on the skills and knowledge
necessary to live and be successful in a Papua New Guinean community. This
educational reform has been extremely relevant and beneficial for the communities as
well because matters such as curriculum development, supervision, and even choosing
the language to be the medium of instruction were placed in the hands of the community
(Litteral, 2001). Concerning this process of choosing the language to be used, Robert
Litteral notes in his article “Language Development in Papua New Guinea” that the
language of choice is often the lingua franca, or Tok-Pisin. In the implementation of
vernacular education, the community has been given the opportunity to be active
producers of education, rather than passive consumers of western methods of education.
Much of the existing motivation to revamp the educational system stems from the
need to keep Papua New Guinean children in school at all. Offering them education in
Pidginization 35
their own language makes education relevant to their lives and involves the surrounding
communities in the process. Litteral shows his support for vernacular education by saying
that “[T]he advantage of the vernacular for initial education will produce not only better
educated, but also less alienated youth. This is good for society. Enabling the parents to
understand and participate in the education of their children because the language of the
community is used is good both for the student and for the society” (Litteral, 2001).
Concerning the status of adult literacy in Papua New Guinea, as previously stated PNG
ranks 30th in the world for adult illiteracy, which is still ten rankings above Haiti. The
illiteracy rate has improved from 51.7 percent in 1980 to 34 percent in 2003 (Indicator:
Adult Illiteracy).
Conclusion
Haitian-Creole of Haiti and Tok-Pisin of Papua New Guinea serve as illuminating
case studies of the linguistic phenomenon of pidginization. To gain a comprehensive
understanding of this unique linguistic process it must be considered from social,
historical, and linguistic perspectives. The histories of these respective countries both
demonstrate a master-servant nature of contact. The degree of continuing influence from
the European mother-tongue plays a defining role; not only does it determine the
language’s current position within the pidgin life-cycle, but it also affects society’s view
of the language which can either mobilize or stabilize the language within the life-cycle.
An analysis of the syntax, morphology, and phonology of Haitian-Creole and Tok-Pisin
demonstrates the existence of simplification within current language samples. It’s
important to remember that these language samples are static snap-shots of a process that
is continually subject to change. A discussion of the current status and uses of the
Pidginization 36
languages in their respective countries today offers a revealing glimpse at each
language’s current placement within the life-cycle. The degree of use within the realm of
education plays a significant factor in the degree to which the language is stabilized. That
degree of use in education is in turn influenced by the respective society’s view of the
language; this is a major difference between Haiti and Tok-Pisin. Pidginization is unique
in that it is a sociolinguistic phenomenon encompassing both language creation and
second language learning.
Pidginization 37
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Pidginization 39
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